State of Washington v. Octaviano Alvarez ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                           FILED
    JULY 28, 2015
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    W A State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                             )
    )    No. 32547-4-III
    Respondent,                )
    )
    v.                                        )
    )
    OCTAVIANO ALVAREZ,                               )    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    Appellant.                 )
    KORSMO, J. -    Octaviano Alvarez challenges three felony convictions, arguing
    that evidence was improperly seized from him and that his counsel was ineffective for
    failing to vigorously challenge the seizure. Concluding that the seizure was proper and
    that counsel therefore did not err, we affirm.
    FACTS
    Mr. Alvarez was accused of committing residential burglary, theft of a motor
    vehicle, and possession of a stolen vehicle for offenses occurring in Yakima on October
    9,2013. The possession of a stolen vehicle charge involved a silver Honda Accord that
    had been taken about 8:00 a.m. that day. Deputy Sheriff Brian McIlrath discovered the
    car about an hour later on Cemetery Road. It had crashed into a vineyard trellis near an
    No. 32547-4-III
    State v. Alvarez
    irrigation ditch, completely disabling the vehicle. After the car was removed, the officer
    could tell that the driver had walked and crawled across the vineyard and the irrigation
    ditch and would have been muddied in the process. The person then walked away
    through the vineyard, leaving footprints.
    Later that morning Arnoldo A vila returned from work to his residence at the home
    of the Madrigals on Schoon Road. He immediately noticed that things were amiss. A
    truck l on the property had been moved and tampered with; items from the house were
    inside it. Mr. Avila entered the home and encountered an intruder wearing a backpack.
    He told Mr. Avila that he was hiding from the police because he had just stolen a car that
    he had left on Cemetery Road. He asked if he could hide in the house. Mr. Avila threw
    him out and called 911.
    Dispatch alerted officers of the burglary and described the suspect as a man
    wearing a black shirt with a square pattern, carrying a black backpack and having wet
    feet. A detective reported to the scene and interviewed Mr. Avila. Meanwhile, Deputy
    McIlrath drove up Alboro Road. He spotted Mr. Alvarez, whom he knew from prior
    contacts, standing in a doorway of a house about a half-mile from the burglary. Since
    Mr. Alvarez matched the description of the burglary suspect, the deputy stopped his car
    and approached. He asked what was going on and Mr. Alvarez replied that he was
    1 This   was the basis of count II, theft of a motor vehicle.
    2
    No. 32547-4-III
    State v. Alvarez
    visiting his friend. However, the homeowner denied knowing Mr. Alvarez and wanted
    him off his property. Mr. Alvarez was wearing a plaid shirt that was muddied on the
    sleeves and down the front; his jeans also were muddy.
    The zipper on the backpack Mr. Alvarez was wearing was pulled halfway down,
    exposing "radio equipment," including "stereos and speaker equipment." Report of
    Proceedings (RP) at 108. Deputy McIlrath arrested Mr. Alvarez for burglary. Mr. Avila
    was transported to the scene and identified Mr. Alvarez as the man inside the house. Mr.
    Madrigal subsequently identified the stereo equipment as having been stolen from the
    truck. Deputy McIlrath placed Mr. Alvarez in his patrol car and put Mr. Alvarez's
    belongings in the trunk of the vehicle.
    Deputy Steve Changala responded to the scene and looked at Mr. Alvarez's shoe
    bottoms to observe the print pattern. He later testified that the print pattern was
    consistent with the prints observed leading away from the stolen car. The deputy then
    drove to the scene of the car wreck and followed the tracks through the vineyard and
    across other properties, including a marsh, until they reached the area of Schoon Road.
    He returned and obtained Mr. Alvarez's shoes from Deputy McIlrath. Deputy Chang ala
    then made new tracks with the shoes beside existing tracks and took pictures for
    comparison. The photographs ultimately were admitted during trial without objection.
    3
    No. 32547-4-II1
    State v. Alvarez
    The case eventually proceeded to jury trial on the three noted counts. Defense
    counsel sought to suppress the shoe print photographs and the stereo equipment
    recovered from the backpack, contending that the officers needed his client's consent or a
    warrant to seize the items. He noted that the prosecution would be arguing "plain view"
    and search incident to the arrest as the basis for using the evidence. Counsel's main
    concern was the showing of the stereo equipment to Mr. Madrigal to confirm that the
    I
    material was taken from his truck.                                                            I
    The trial judge concluded that the initial observation of the stereo equipment was
    in either "open view" or "plain view." The subsequent seizure of the backpack and
    I
    inventory of its contents were conducted incident to the arrest for burglary. RP at 66-67.
    I
    i
    After the State's opening statement, but before the testimony of the first witness, Deputy    I
    McIlrath, the court asked for an offer of proof concerning the basis for the arrest. After    f
    f
    I
    hearing the State's proffer, which was reading large excerpts from Deputy McIlrath's          II
    t
    report, the court concluded that the arrest for burglary was valid and the backpack was
    properly seized. RP at 92. The court also concluded that there was no expectation of
    privacy in the shoes once Mr. Alvarez was arrested. RP at 94-95.
    The jury found Mr. Alvarez guilty on the three charged counts. The court imposed
    standard range terms on each of the offenses. Mr. Alvarez then timely appealed to this
    court.
    4
    No. 32547-4-III
    State v. Alvarez
    ANALYSIS
    Mr. Alvarez contends that either the trial court erred in finding the arrest lawful
    and the backpack contents in "plain view," or his counsel erred in not pursuing the
    motion to suppress more vigorously. Because the record amply supports the
    determination of probable cause to arrest Mr. Alvarez for residential burglary, his
    remaining arguments are moot or without merit.
    A person commits residential burglary when he enters or remains unlawfully in a
    dwelling (other than a vehicle) with the intent to commit a crime against a person or
    property therein. RCW 9A.52.025(1). Probable cause to arrest "exists where the facts
    and circumstances within the arresting officer's knowledge and of which the officer has
    reasonably trustworthy information are sufficient to warrant a person of reasonable
    caution in a belief that an offense has been committed." State v. Terrovona, 
    105 Wn.2d 632
    ,643, 
    716 P.2d 295
     (1986). The existence of probable cause is a legal issue that is
    reviewed de novo by our appellate courts. State v. Chamberlin, 
    161 Wn.2d 30
    , 40, 
    162 P.3d 389
     (2007).
    Mr. Alvarez argues that the totality of the evidence did not support Deputy
    McIlrath's decision to arrest him. He acknowledges that Mr. Avila provided "reasonably
    trustworthy information that an officer could rely on" concerning the existence of a
    5
    No. 32547-4-III
    State v. Alvarez
    burglary and the description of the suspect. 2 Br. of Appellant at 11. He takes issue with
    the deputy connecting him to the suspect in that crime. The deputy's observations
    satisfactorily made that connection.
    Mr. Avila's information described a residential burglary in progress-a strange
    man in the house and items of personal property that already had been taken outside to a
    truck that had been moved to apparently facilitate carrying away the proceeds of the
    larceny. He described the man for the 911 operator. Upon seeing Mr. Alvarez, Deputy
    McIlrath testified that he "matched the description." RP at 107, 110. The deputy's report
    described for the judge what Mr. Alvarez was wearing-a darkjean shirt with squares
    that was muddy on the sleeves, muddied jeans, and a black backpack with stereo
    equipment visible. RP at 91. Although Mr. Avila's initial report did not describe what
    had been taken and he later would testify that the backpack was zippered closed when he
    observed it, the deputy's observations were consistent both with what Mr. Avila had seen
    and what a burglar might be carrying away from the scene. In other words, the items
    2  These concessions were proper. A named citizen informant is presumptively
    reliable. State v. Wible, 
    113 Wn. App. 18
    ,24, 
    51 P.3d 830
     (2002) (quoting State v.
    Northness, 
    20 Wn. App. 551
    , 557-58, 
    582 P.2d 546
     (1978». Reasonable suspicion for a
    stop may be supplied by an eyewitness report of criminal activity to an officer. State v.
    Lee, 
    147 Wn. App. 912
    , 918, 
    199 P.3d 445
     (2008), review denied, 
    166 Wn.2d 1016
    (2009).
    6
    No. 32547-4-III
    State v. Alvarez
    observed in the partially open backpack enhanced the victim's report since electronic
    equipment is frequently stolen and the deputy's observation did not detract from the
    information supplied by Mr. Avila. Given that the description "matched," the deputy had
    probable cause to believe Mr. Avila was the burglar. Coupled with his lie about visiting
    his friend when the deputy contacted him outside Mr. Zach Scole's house, there was
    ample information to lead a reasonable law enforcement officer in Deputy McIlrath's
    position to believe Mr. Alvarez had committed residential burglary.
    Mr. Alvarez argues that there was no reliable information describing how the
    suspect could go from the burglary at the Madrigal's residence to Mr. Scole's house.
    There was no requirement that the deputy know how the suspect could traverse the half
    mile during the period while Mr. Avila was calling in the crime and deputies were
    responding to it. The issue was whether he fit the description, not how he got to where he
    was observed. Even if it were probable that other muddy men with wet shoes wearing a
    black backpack and dark patterned shirt were within a half mile of the Madrigal home,
    that information would not have detracted from the fact that Mr. Alvarez fit the
    description. The hypothetical existence of other people fitting the description did not
    negate the fact Mr. Alvarez also did so.
    7
    No. 32547-4-II1
    State v. Alvarez
    The deputy had probable cause to arrest Mr. Alvarez for residential burglary. The
    trial court correctly denied the motion to suppress the evidence. 3
    Our conclusion moots discussion of the "plain view" argument since the evidence
    was seized, and used, pursuant to the arrest and lawful search incident to that arrest. We
    do note, however, that if the deputy had in fact seized4 the backpack on the basis of the
    observations without first arresting Mr. Alvarez, this would present an "open view"
    problem rather than a "plain view" issue. A "plain view" occurs in the situation where an
    officer is intruding in a constitutionally protected place at the time he makes an
    observation, while an "open view" occurs from a "non constitutionally protected area."
    State v. Kennedy, 
    107 Wn.2d 1
    , 10, 
    726 P.2d 445
     (1986). Here the deputy made his
    observations from outside the Scole home in an open area where Mr. Alvarez had no
    constitutionally protected interests.
    3 Mr.  Alvarez does not independently challenge the use of his tennis shoes to compare
    the print to the prints found in the vineyard. It is proper for police to use shoes seized from a
    defendant to investigate prints left at the scene of an unrelated crime. State v. Cheatam, 
    150 Wn.2d 626
    , 633-43,
    81 P.3d 830
     (2003) (officers who arrested defendant for rape could use
    his shoes to compare the prints to those left at the scene of an unrelated rape).
    The evidence observed by the officer was not the product of a search and would
    4
    be admissible even if the stereo equipment had been suppressed. See State v. Khounvichai,
    
    149 Wn.2d 557
    , 564-66,
    69 P.3d 862
     (2003).
    8
    No. 32547-4-II1
    State v. Alvarez
    Finally, the conclusion that probable cause existed negates the need to discuss the
    derivative argument that counsel performed ineffectively. To prevail on such a claim, Mr.
    Alvarez would have to show both that his counsel erred and that the error prejudiced him.
    Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 689-91, 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
     (1984).
    He cannot demonstrate error on these facts. Probable cause did exist for the arrest.
    Affirmed.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
    2.06.040.
    WE CONCUR:
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